Transcription

Down Farnborough Kent

Thursday

My dear Stokes

Many thanks for your letters, I enclosed the proper one to Sir G. Grey
& this will show him, that we did not intentionally mean to insult
him.— It has been a vexatious affair; for what I remember of him, I like
much.— I have very little doubt that your explanation is the true one, viz
that my note went in your proof-sheet to the Printers.—

I return you the S. Australian letter with thanks; I was glad to see
it.—

I congratulate you heartily on the great success of your Book; if I were in your place, I should be prouder of having been introduced to the
old Duke (as I heard was the case) than for a hundred pistols
from Joinville, —extraordinary as that compliment
is.

This letter must have been written after CD's letter to George Grey,
10 November 1846. In his letter to Grey, CD did not mention the possibility
that his original note went to the printer with Stokes's proof-sheets. Neither
did CD mention this explanation in his letter to Robert FitzRoy, 23 November
[1846]. Presumably CD received a letter from Stokes after 23 November to which
this is his reply. The 26th is the earliest possible Thursday following the
23 November.

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f2 1020.f2

Stokes 1846 was reviewed in the July 1846 issues of the
Foreign Quarterly Review (37: 257–80) and Fraser's
Magazine (34: 105–17).

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f3 1020.f3

Probably the Duke of Wellington.

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f4 1020.f4

François Ferdinand Philippe Louis Marie, Prince de Joinville, a French
expert in military and naval affairs.